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  2. Code Ninjas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_Ninjas

    Code Ninjas is a for-profit educational organization specializing in teaching coding to kids, and is the largest kids coding franchise in the world with over 400 locations open and operating in three countries. [1]

  3. Modern schools of ninjutsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_schools_of_ninjutsu

    In 1972, Masaaki Hatsumi founded the Bujinkan organization. It uses the concepts of Ninjutsu in three of its nine schools [3] though they have since steered away from the "Ninjutsu" moniker in order to avoid stereotypes and since the art, which contains 9 ryūha (or schools), only has 3 schools based on the ninja while the other 6 are based on samurai tactics.

  4. Order of Musashi Shinobi Samurai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Musashi_Shinobi...

    The Order of Musashi Shinobi Samurai is a Japanese shinobisamurai clan which served Tokugawa Ieyasu and the Edo Shogunate from 1582 to 1868. They served the Tokugawa Shogunate as intelligence operatives called onmitsu (undercover agents), and metsuke (inspectors), and in the 19th century, as diplomats. When the political system changed due to ...

  5. Ninjutsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ninjutsu

    Ninjutsu (忍術), sometimes used interchangeably with the modern term ninpō (忍法), [ 1] is the martial art strategy and tactics of unconventional warfare, guerrilla warfare, insurgency tactics and espionage purportedly practised by the ninja. [ 2][page needed] Ninjutsu was a separate discipline in some traditional Japanese schools, which ...

  6. Jinichi Kawakami - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jinichi_Kawakami

    Jinichi Kawakami (川上仁一) b. 1949, head of Banke Shinobinoden, is the last sōke and only heir to authentic ninjutsu. [ 1] [better source needed] He says he is the 21st head of the Koga Ban family ( Iga and Koga Ninjutsu), a mercenary, and the honorary director of the Iga-ryu Ninja Museum. [ 2] In 2011, he was specially appointed a ...

  7. CoderDojo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CoderDojo

    CoderDojo is a global volunteer-led community of free programming workshops for young people (not to be confused with Code Ninjas who is also a coding business that refers to their locations as dojos). The movement is a grassroots organisation with individual clubs (called "Dojos") acting independently. A charity called the CoderDojo Foundation ...

  8. Kōga-ryū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kōga-ryū

    Kōga-ryū. Kōga-ryū (甲賀流, "School of Kōga") is an umbrella term for a set of traditions of ninjutsu that originated from the region of Kōga (now the city Kōka in Shiga Prefecture ). The samurai of Kōga-ryū were known as "Kōga-no-mono", and operated as shinobi throughout Japan's turbulent Sengoku period .

  9. Togakure-ryū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Togakure-ryū

    Togakure-ryū. Togakure-ryū (戸隠流) is a historical tradition of ninjutsu known as the "School of the Hidden Door", allegedly founded during the Oho period (1161–1162) by Daisuke Nishina (仁科大助) ( a.k.a. Daisuke Togakure (戸隠大助) ), who learned his original fighting techniques from a Chinese monk named Kain Dōshi. [ 1]